Squad, how much we thinking CS on steam will go for?
I'm thinking no more than 30 usd right?
I'd assume $40, but $30 is my personal preference ('m buying it no matter what).
Maybe have a discount for people who own the Sky games or something.
Squad, how much we thinking CS on steam will go for?
I'm thinking no more than 30 usd right?
ZinVathekPuzzledFace.png
I don't follow.
I'm just joking around
Chapter 6 spoilers
He manages to escape by abandoning his friends. It was the honestly the correct thing to do, but still...
Don't abandon your friends!
-Every shonen asshole protagonist
I'd assume $40, but $30 is my personal preference ('m buying it no matter what).
Maybe have a discount for people who own the Sky games or something.
The games released on PS3/Vita at $40, no way XSEED is going to release a late port at the same base price as original.
They will probably be $30.
Finished SC late last night. My final play time was about 52 hours.
I didn't post about the last few chapters, but in short, I think it was well worth the hype. FC is a great game and totally complete in scope, but SC goes there and then some. It might even push a little too far, actually. Some stints in the game were a little slow or just sort of a hassle to play through, and it's probably a chapter or two too long.
And yet, I don't really think the game has a pacing "issue". I think Trails in general has a very particular pacing that it's dedicated too. But when it's so meticulous in how it sets up lore/backstory, how it builds up its characters, how it delivers revelations and surprises based on the smallest details, it's hard to hold it over the games head.
The story in this game made me laugh at so many scenes and tear up at others. I was pumping my fist with adrenaline when characters I loved would show up at the last possible second. My heart was heavy when characters had to face their past or even new challenges they weren't sure they could handle.
One thing I've had in the back of my mind is asking what SC is about - as in thematically. I think you could boil it down to being a coming of age story (if you REALLY want to) and it's obviously very good at how it portrays heroism and optimism. But I think the real answer to my question is that it's a story about second chances and holding out hope. You can always grow and be a better person. There's always a pathway forward, open unto you.
I think SC is a masterpiece; It's one of the best RPGs I've ever played and probably one of the best in the genre as a whole.
Is this something that's changed in the later games?On the bright side, being able to reap the Sepith rewards from just killing the monsters on the field sure is convenient.
Is this something that's changed in the later games?
I haven't played ToCS yet, although this should change this month. Do field attacks give you an advantage even if you attack from the front, as long as the enemy doesn't touch you first?The Evo games introduce a field attack mechanic similar to what the Cold Steel games have for easy pre-emptive battles. Certainly does save you the hassle of grinding Sepith near the end of the game.
To tell the truth, during FC and SC I kinda assumed that Kurt is just some kind of a middling B-rank bracer at best because [FC+SC].his first notable involvement in the story is his team losing to Zane's team, then he's revealed to have botched a delivery mission to Cassius, getting played around by Weissman and finally goes through a disastrous infiltration mission
I agree with a lot of this. If I might add, the meticulous character build-up also helps in making otherwise cheesy scenes feel really, really sincere. Like, [FC Ending]Joshua's entire speech, capped with "you're like the sun" is the corniest thing but that situation, their past interactions and the fact that that Joshua says it makes it sublime.
I If I have to lay some criticism, sometimes I feel that everyone around Estelle and Joshua are a bit too understanding and accommodating of their plights, but I suppose optimism is a core tenet of this series.
I haven't played ToCS yet, although this should change this month. Do field attacks give you an advantage even if you attack from the front, as long as the enemy doesn't touch you first?
I haven't played ToCS yet, although this should change this month. Do field attacks give you an advantage even if you attack from the front, as long as the enemy doesn't touch you first?
I haven't played ToCS yet, although this should change this month. Do field attacks give you an advantage even if you attack from the front, as long as the enemy doesn't touch you first?
Oh, how many chapters does 3rd have?
It's a tiered system. There's advantage, double advantage, and triple advantage. I don't recall the condition for each.
Advantage is walking behind on an enemy. Double Advantage is walking behind on an enemy after an attack. Triple Advantage is walking behind on an enemy after an attack that stuns the enemy.
Thank you for the replies! Different physical damage types sound like an Ys Seven influence.From what I remember, there are five different scenarios:
Enemy advantage, where the enemy back attacks you.
A regular fight, where you just do whatever.
Single advantage, where you run into the enemy from the back.
Double advantage, where you attack the enemy from the back and stun them
And triple advantage, where you attack the enemy from the back with their weapon weakness... or you attack them a bunch of times from any direction, with some characters for some reason. I honestly don't know why this worked for me. Wonky hitboxes? The characters are just that OP? Regardless, stars need to be spinning above the enemy.
How is quartz balance this time around? I thought it was questionable in the Trails in the Sky trilogy.
Definitely. I think XSEEDs flavorful writing helps to keep the pleasantries from ever becoming too much of a sugar rush.
I would also add that more than just optimism, I think a lot of Trails general worldview is rooted in pacificism, specifically. I think that really comes out wheneverThis carries over to CS, too. The series is very anti-war.Estelle and co. get to speak with Queen Alicia and especially when Olivier is explaining his motivation to Zechs after his conversation with Kloe.
It's a tiered system. There's advantage, double advantage, and triple advantage. I don't recall the condition for each.
Thank you for the write-up. The Master Quartz effects, if all of them are as powerful as the ones you described are, sound very impactful and playstyle defining. If I could put the ailment infliction rate boosting one on Olivier back in TitS, his role would change entirely, from dealing magic damage to disabling groups with Quick Draw.Coming from TiTs to Cold Steel, you might be thrown off a bit.
See, quartz this time round already have effects of their own e.g Evade+5%, spell quartz (e.g equipping this quartz allows you to cast group heal+a couple of others, but make enemies more aware of you), so you no longer have to match say, different elements in a row together to gain access to those spells that you can use against enemies
To add on to that, there's also what we call the Master Quartz system this time round. You can gain some basic ones on your characters as well as unlock others through the course of the story.
You can choose which ones to equip for their passive abilities e.g certain Master Quartz already come with some default spells that you can gain access to when you have them equipped. By taking part in battles, you can earn exp which goes into the Master Quartz and at certain levels, new abilities will be unlocked....and at max level, the bonuses can get a bit crazy.
E.g maybe you can inflict certain statuses on the enemies with normal attacks at a certain percentage, but leveling the Master Quartz up to max can make it happen 90% of the time along with various other QoL improvements like CP recover outside of battle by walking, gain CP via killing enemies etc.
I actually like the sound of this. In the Trails in the Sky trilogy, it's literally impossible to fully equip a character with endgame quartz without having them gain access to a very significant percentage of the spell list, which eliminates much of character identity. Do the smart thing, put Action 5 on everybody, and suddenly the whole party (with the exception of Agate, Zin, and Mueller who dumpstat ATS too much) gets very adept at casting Time arts. To counter this, I even started doing a challenge run halfway through the 3rd and had characters only cast arts that matched the element of their central orbment slot. I was very pleased with the results and found that it made party composition significantly more interesting, particularly in the final dungeon. I intend to replay the entire trilogy like this eventually, although I may have to break the rule in a couple of sequences. In SC,I really enjoy that sort of minigame of combining quartz for different spells, trying to fit the right amount of each sepith into a character's orbment to get the spells I want.
Was disappointed when I realized CS threw that out the window.
There's, but for the most part the chapters go a little more quickly than usual compared to SC.8 chapters and a prologue
EDIT: I have the worst posting luck. What they ^ said.
Odd, I figured quickly it was aboutliberalism, strengths and weaknesses all. Liberty, respect for all, striving for peaceful debate, etc, while also pointing out what happens when that is tunnel-visioned, passive, or self-paralyzing. This is especially evident towards Erebonia's machinations for hegemony and Richards' pre-coup reasoning.
It's also in the name!
I have another question about orbments in ToCS. The official site of the first game has this screenshot showing that orbments still have lines:
What is their purpose now, if arts are no longer granted by accumulating sufficient elemental points on a single line? Also, what's up with the ACC+ and EVA+ stats? Why are they separate from DEX and AGL?
The only purpose of lines now is determining a character's max EP. ACC and EVA are not separate from DEX and AGL, they're just displayed separately so you can more easily tell their actual effects iirc.
The only purpose of lines now is determining a character's max EP. ACC and EVA are not separate from DEX and AGL, they're just displayed separately so you can more easily tell their actual effects iirc.
Thank you both. Good to hear that orbments with several lines now have a unique advantage, one that encourages heavier use of physical attacks and crafts. Single line orbments were straight up better in TitS.Pretty sure you can also only have one status-inducing quartz per line (like the 10% chance to petrify, freeze, etc.)
You'll be installing SC as soon as the credits end, that's where.I'm definitely looking forward to seeing where all theseshenanigans lead.mind control and secret identity
Thank you both. Good to hear that orbments with several lines now have a unique advantage, one that encourages heavier use of physical attacks and crafts. Single line orbments were straight up better in TitS.
You'll be installing SC as soon as the credits end, that's where.
Well they're selling the 3rd at $30 so my bet is on $40The games released on PS3/Vita at $40, no way XSEED is going to release a late port at the same base price as original.
They will probably be $30.
But 3rd was also a "new" release (of an old game), whereas Cold Steel is an (admittedly improved) port of an older game, that's currently on sale for 10 bucks.Well they're selling the 3rd at $30 so my bet is on $40
You'll be installing SC as soon as the credits end, that's where.
Man,in 3rd is perfect. Really long, too. Such an excellent character.Kloe's moon door episode
I found it boring. It would have worked better as a star door instead of a moon door. Would have swapped it with star door 8.
Looks like Sen III is getting Cero C rating in Japan. For comparison Sen II garnered a B.
I read some people found it boring, but I really like its low-keyness. At the end of the day, it's actually a rather mundane high school trouble but the characterizations really shines through. Also, it effectively [Sky the 3rd, Moon Door 3]changed my overall impression of Lechter from "that spy guy" to "Kloe's guy".
Looks like Sen III is getting Cero C rating in Japan. For comparison Sen II garnered a B.
Oo, I wonder what kind of things necessitates that. Sky the 3rd also only got CERO B and that one got pretty gruesome, even discounting the cut stuff from the unrated PC version.
Oo, I wonder what kind of things necessitates that. Sky the 3rd also only got CERO B and that one got pretty gruesome, even discounting the cut stuff from the unrated PC version.
Wait, if Ao Evo got Cero C, why didn't the original get the same rating?
SC Evo added a visual highlighting Luciola's cleavage and Ao Evo added a number of visuals that... well, also highlight cleavages. Nothing of significance was added to the core game, so it must have been those visuals.
Just chiming in to say Persona 4 Golden/ Person 5 got Cero C, a couple Final Fantasies and some other JRPGs have gotten Cero C, it doesn't mean much. Even Bravely Default on the 3DS got Cero C. Its the equivalent of a teen rating.
Last time a Falcom game got a CERO C - Ys SEVEN - was because of a torture scene. With everything that has to be resolved in Sen III, it wouldn't surprise me if there's more violence. Falcom maybe also reasons that the teenagers that happened to grow up with Sen I and II are now old enough for a CERO C rating - kind of how Harry Potter grew alongside its fanbase.Persona 4 Golden and Persona 5 got ESRB M so they are not really ideal examples of teen rating games, haha.
But ya, I know that standards between countries are different and CERO C is 15+. Just wondering what the difference might be. (and apparently it's most likely cleavages? Booo)
SC Evo added a visual highlighting Luciola's cleavage and Ao Evo added a number of visuals that... well, also highlight cleavages. Nothing of significance was added to the core game, so it must have been those visuals.